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August 2008 Issue

Iowa Town Shows Gratitude to Baptists
Flood debris sitting in the sun produced a foul odor in Lamont,
Iowa, a small town of 490 people about thirty-five miles east
of Waterloo. Some residents piled debris on the curb for sanitation
workers to haul away, but they were at a loss for what to do next.
Many of the town's senior adults and some with physical disabilities
had been waiting for assistance to clean out their homes, which
were damaged by floodwaters when eight inches of rain fell the
evening of May 25.
The mayor of Lamont, Alfred Hotchkiss, heard about Southern
Baptist disaster relief at a meeting of the emergency management
council in the county seat about twenty miles away. He asked if
SBC workers could come to the town and help the residents who
were having trouble getting assistance.
Ty Berry, disaster relief coordinator for the Baptist Convention
of Iowa, responded in the affirmative, and a one-day blitz of
the town was arranged for July 9. Twenty-eight workers from Oklahoma,
South Carolina, Colorado, and Texas converged on the town and
cleaned out eleven homes.
Residents said they couldn't believe Southern Baptists would
travel from all parts of the country to work in their little town.
"After you go through something like [the flooding], you
really appreciate it," Hotchkiss said of the Baptists' help.
"We had water nearly as wide as a football field across our
main street in town from the Lamont Creek."
Hotchkiss said the town's Methodist minister "has been
going around trying to calm the people down after the flood. But
he can only do so much, and people were starting to get upset
with the lack of progress.
"I heard about this service, and we arranged for it. You
really appreciate the help, and then when these guys are done
they stand around and pray with you and give you hugs," the
mayor said. "That's the really great part."
Baptist Press
Southern Baptists Included at Bush Faith-based
Conference
Government bureaucracy can't "fix" America, but the
nation's people can, President Bush told one thousand-plus leaders
of faith-based and community groups gathered in Washington to
network with each other and hear from various government leaders.
"Groups like yours have harnessed a power that no government
bureaucracy can match," Bush said. "So when I came to
Washington, my goal was to ensure that government made you a full
partner in our efforts to serve those in need. The results have
been uplifting, and that's what we're here to talk about today."
Bush was joined by cabinet members and other government leaders
at the June 26-27 meeting of public- and private-sector leaders
at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington. The White House Office
of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives hosted the national conference
which included about two hundred small group workshops as well
as several bipartisan plenary sessions.
The event served as a "pep talk," said Karl Ragan,
a specialist in disaster relief for the Southern Baptist Convention's
North American Mission Board. "The entire administration
is looking ahead toward the next administration," Ragan said.
"They wanted the faith-based groups to show strength and
solidarity behind the faith-based initiatives going into the next
administration."
Ragan said even though the event included more than just faith-based
groups, "I was impressed with the number of high-level government
officials who were openly displaying their faith. I really wasn't
expecting that; it was kind of neat.
"Our president quoted Scripture correctly, not out of
context," Ragan continued. "This was totally unscripted.
It seemed like he was speaking from the heart.... There were others
sitting around who commented on the president's passion for this
[faith-based and community initiatives] and his faith."
Bush received several standing ovations during his fifteen-minute
talk, especially after quoting Scripture, Ragan added.
Ragan also represented Southern Baptists at a networking session
limited to the nation's fifteen largest faith-based and community
entities.
Baptist Press
American Family Association Declares McDonald's
Boycott
The American Family Association launched a boycott of McDonald's
on July 3, saying the restaurant chain's corporate leaders refuse
"to remain neutral in the culture wars" by promoting
the homosexual agenda.
Tim Wildmon, president of AFA, told The Washington Post
that the association proceeded with a boycott when McDonald's
declined to remove itself from the National Gay and Lesbian Chamber
of Commerce.
"We're saying that there are people who support AFA who
don't appreciate their dollars from the hamburgers they bought
being put into an organization that's going to fight against the
values they believe in," Wildmon said.
AFA says on its new Web site www.boycottmcdonalds.com that
the boycott "is not about hiring homosexuals. It is not about
homosexuals eating at McDonald's. It is not about how homosexual
employees are treated. It is about McDonald's, as a corporation,
refusing to remain neutral in the culture wars. McDonald's has
chosen not to remain neutral but to give the full weight of their
corporation to promoting the homosexual agenda, including homosexual
marriage."
The National Gay and Lesbian Chamber of Commerce, according
to its Web site, "represents the interests of the estimated
1.4 million LGBT owned businesses in the United States. Through
its affiliated network of forty-five state and local chambers
and business organizations, the NGLCC is the largest LGBT business
development and economic advocacy organization in the country."
The Web site also makes clear that the chamber lobbies Congress
on a wide range of issues related to the homosexual agenda.
An official with the Southern Baptist Ethics & Religious
Liberty Commission, while not commenting specifically on the AFA
boycott, issued a statement to Baptist Press recapping
general principles regarding Christian stewardship in their consumer
spending.
"Discerning Southern Baptists note which corporations
support causes or movements which are antithetical to a biblical
perspective and then weigh carefully which businesses in good
conscience and, perhaps of necessity, they can patronize,"
ERLC Vice President Dwayne Hastings said July 7.
"In this day of conglomerates and multinational corporations,
it is difficult to find a large corporation that does not in some
way support something which stands in opposition to what we know
to be good and moral," Hastings added.
"Yet as Christians, we should be consistent in living
out our values, rooted in God's Word, even if it means we have
to sacrifice. Each of us has an obligation to carefully and prayerfully
consider where we spend our money. Yet at the end of the day,
that is a personal decision each of us must make."
Baptist Press
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Copyright
© 2008 Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee
SBC Life is published by the
Executive Committee of the Southern Baptist Convention
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